point of view · Most of the stories are told from the first person,
but on several occasions, O’Brien uses the third person as either
a distancing tactic or a chance to let one of his platoon-mates,
such as Mitchell Sanders or Rat Kiley, tell his story.

tone ·
The Things They Carried is an introspective
memory story and a self-conscious examination of the methods and
reasons behind storytelling. The narrator is unreliable; he speaks
of the necessity of blurring truth and fiction in a true war story.

tense · Past tense, shifting between the Vietnam War in the
late 1960s and the narrator’s immediate past,
twenty years after the war

setting (time) · Late 1960s and late 1980s

setting (place) · Primarily Vietnam, but also U.S. locations including Iowa and Massachusetts

protagonist · Tim O’Brien

major conflict · The men of the Alpha Company, especially Tim O’Brien,
grapple with the effects—both immediate and long-term—of the Vietnam
War.

rising action · In the summer of 1968, Tim O’Brien
receives a draft notice. Despite a desire to follow his convictions
and flee to Canada, he feels he would be embarrassed to refuse to
fulfill his patriotic duty and so concedes to fight in Vietnam.

climax · During their tour of duty, the men of the Alpha Company
must cope with the loss of their own men and the guilt that comes
from killing and watching others die.

falling action · After he returns from war, O’Brien grapples with his
memories by telling stories about Vietnam.

themes · Physical and emotional burdens; fear of shame as motivaton;
the subjection of truth to storytelling

motifs · Storytelling; ambiguous morality; loneliness and isolation

symbols · The dead young Vietnamese soldier; Kathleen; Linda

foreshadowing · O’Brien mentions the deaths of men such as Ted Lavender,
Curt Lemon, and Kiowa before he gives detailed accounts of how and when
they died in later stories.

The secret O'Brien claimed to have kept may also have been depicted in that reoccurring emotional/fictional truth that we know oh so well from this story. Perhaps he even showed it in the first chapter, rather than telling it.